These stories are so fundamentally wrong that they require extensive revision or, more likely, retraction. Not only was I unable to verify a single new claim in the piece, and found numerous, significant errors, but the entire framing is a misrepresentation. Dayen presents “vulture debt” speculator Laurence Schneider as a Michael Lewis-style creative maverick who bravely takes on a corrupt banking behemoth, JPMorgan Chase (Chase).

In fact, even a cursory look into court records will show that, contrary to the article’s wild assertions, Schneider is no benefactor of homeowners. Nor was Schneider substantively victimized by buying the small package of mortgages that is the sole focus of this story, as Dayen bizarrely and insistently claims.

To illustrate the alternative universe these pieces inhabit, here is what the Special Report asserts:

…. [Schneider’s] business model resembled what Roosevelt did in the 1930s with the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, which prevented nearly 1 million foreclosures while turning a small profit. [His] model exemplified how the administrations of George W. Bush and Barack Obama could have handled the foreclosure crisis if they’d been more committed to helping Main Street than Wall Street.

As even a modest investigation makes clear, this account is false. In reality, how could Bush and Obama have better handled the foreclosure crisis? They could have rewritten the bankruptcy code to force servicers to write down distressed first-lien mortgages to the fair value of the houses. They could have let banks and trusts fail by refusing to prop up reckless counterparty risk, and then purchased their mortgages for next to nothing in bankruptcy, refinancing at the lower principal amounts. They could have provided a real incentive for banks to write down or write-off loans.

Selling loans to Larry Schneider, at a deep discount, is about the worst thing banks could have done for homeowners.

It is difficult to overstate how wrongheaded these stories are. This is not an “ordinary guy vs. bad banker” tale: it is one banker, Schneider, fighting a bank, Chase. To bring public pressure to bear on an otherwise hopeless case, Schneider is trying to spin his interactions with Chase as somehow sinister, when, at the very most, his allegations boil down to a garden variety breach of contract claim. Big bank screws over vulture debt buyer? Since when?

Schneider’s narrative, and The Nation’s stenographic amplification of it, would be bad enough if Chase and Schneider had treated homeowners equally poorly. But as detailed below, Schneider has in fact treated homeowners significantly worse. This core narrative – that Schneider is somehow noble – is arguably even more misleading than the myriad of factual errors and omissions in the piece.

I had assumed that David Dayen was simply unaware of Schneider’s checkered business history, and that The Nation’s editors were on vacation when his stories were published. But actually, Dayen declared in his response to me (see below) that he knew full well that Schneider has been involved in “numerous” foreclosures that are “morally dubious,” but that he doesn’t “need people who uncover abuse and misconduct to be angels.” I am mystified at why Dayen then chose not to write a story about how the non-angelic Schneider had uncovered “misconduct,” but instead swept all of Schneider’s dubious behavior under the rug and thus wrote a very different story.

After reading a preliminary version of this article, The Nation, while not saying much about the rest of Dayen’s articles, explicitly stood by his claim that Chase “received settlement credits for forgiving loans it no longer owned.” The Nation evidently assumes that this charge, at least, can be made to stick.

Many others who have considered Schneider’s claims have found them less than credible. Most recently the Department of Justice, which declined to join Schneider’s suit, stated that “[t]he United States […] does not take the position that Chase failed to comply with the terms agreed to in the National Mortgage Settlement” (see note [6] below). It’s hard to be much clearer than that.

If any improper forgiveness occurred with loans not in Schneider’s big bundle, there is no reason to assume that it involved substantial amounts of money, no reason to assume that it was not rectified as soon as the matter was brought to Chase’s attention, and no reason to assume that it was used to claim settlement credits.

In his response to me, Dayen jackknifes from the confident assertions in his published articles (“when [Chase] needed to provide customer relief under the settlements, [Chase] had paperwork created saying it still owned the loans”) to protesting that you can’t prove a negative (“there is no record of whether Chase still took credit for these inactive loans […] there really is no definitive answer”).

I will now give an overview of the major errors in Dayen’s stories, before going on to explain each of them in greater detail:

I. The Nation Has Perversely Acted as a Propagandist for a Mortgage Vulture

There is extensive, readily accessible evidence that Schneider routinely buys severely discounted mortgages and forecloses on the affected homeowners, even in cases where he could easily modify their mortgages instead, while still making handsome profits.

The Nation further alleges that Chase victimized homeowners by writing off their mortgages, which in fact is an action borrower advocates and homeowners regularly advocate. On the other hand, Schneider often vetoed or protested these writeoffs because he was holding out for a bigger payoff and could keep collecting from homeowners in the meantime.

Dayen makes the false assertion that Chase’s forgiveness of these mortgages, a pro-homeowner action, violated the National Mortgage Settlement. He makes other ludicrous claims as to how the Settlement supposedly harmed homeowners which demonstrate a fundamental lack of understanding of how homeownership works.

I do not like being put in the position of appearing to defend a malefactor like Chase, but I have seen again and again that the only hope of succeeding against powerful vested interests is to be accurate. False charges, particularly obviously false charges, serve as ready evidence that critics are uninformed and ready to go off half-cocked, and thus can be safely ignored.

Dayen’s claims about the National Mortgage Settlement are in the one of the story titles and so, in some sense, the centerpiece of his article. However, all disinterested parties that have weighed in on Schneider’s “whistleblower” claims have rejected them, including government bodies that would be expected to join his lawsuits if they had any merit. [1]

Dayen goes on erroneously to accuse Chase of foisting costs on homeowners for which they are in fact always responsible, such as the payment of property taxes.

One has to wonder why The Nation has published not one but two articles which focus primarily on the complaints of a dubious hedge fund vulture – complaints about an insignificant commercial dispute, which have been repeatedly rejected in court.

Schneider asserts that he is entitled to an unheard-of 1500 times (not 1500%, 1500 times) damages on a mere $200,000 investment in mortgages – mortgages, furthermore, that Schneider and Dayen acknowledge were described to Schneider as deeply defective. To put matters into perspective, Schneider made from a few Chase buybacks alone significantly more than he spent on the so-called “toxic waste” deal (see below for greater detail). He rejected Chase’s proposed buyback of 10 more mortgages that would have benefited homeowners and let him instantly realize additional gains equal to 50% of what he spent on the “toxic waste.” This evidence alone upends Dayen’s assertion that Schneider is benevolent and has only modest profit goals.

* * *None of the information I provide here was difficult for me to obtain, working as a single individual in my spare time from my living room with a $25 research budget. None of it is from controversial sources. All documents are from public records, and many were filed by Schneider himself. Even focusing only on the titular lawsuit, it is clear from just the docket entries that Dayen botched that part of the narrative.[2] The Nation had the resources to verify its own reporting but simply neglected to do so.

I am forced to add reluctantly that this is not the first time that Dayen has made substantial errors in his reporting on foreclosures. Lynn Szymoniak, one of the three focal characters in Dayen’s book Chain of Title, has stated in Figueroa v. Szymoniak et. al., Broward County Case No. CACE13006883 that “Author Dayen’s book is not a credible source for the court’s consideration.” Since I was working closely and actively with Szymoniak and the other protagonists in Dayen’s book, I can independently attest that there are significant errors in that work. I am prepared to discuss those as well.

Below I describe the problems in The Nation’s reporting in greater detail (although not every error, since The Nation makes so many unsupported claims in this two articles that it would overburden most readers to discuss them all. I can provide more backup for each point above than I present in the balance of this document).

I believe that any objective reader of the discussion below will conclude that a retraction is warranted. The Nation’s refusal to do so only reinforces my concerns about the breakdown in editorial quality control that has occurred here.

I. The Nation Has Perversely Acted as a Propagandist for a Mortgage Vulture

According to The Nation, Schneider’s business model “was a win-win-win: Borrowers remained in their homes, communities were stabilized, and Schneider made money.”

Schneider was however “enticed” into bad deals by Chase, which “spun its trickery,” setting up a “shell game” that “looks like a criminal racket” – in fact, “Jamie Dimon and his underlings” have “perfected” the “dark art” of “mak[ing] a killing” while “using other people’s money.” Still quoting The Nation, “Schneider managed to be one of the few investors with the means and determination to fight back.”

After receiving the preliminary draft of this article, The Nation protested that “the point of the article is not that Larry Schneider is a hero.” Reading passages like these, however, it is clear that The Nation explicitly and enthusiastically praised Schneider and his business model.

In reality, Schneider’s practices are starkly at odds with those normally supported by progressives.

We know that Schneider bought distressed mortgages for a pittance. I show below that, despite paying pennies, Schneider has in many cases foreclosed on these mortgages, throwing borrowers out of their homes. This is not a secret: examples are easy to find.

Indeed, Schneider himself complains in his lawsuits that Chase’s loan forgiveness had made it harder for him to foreclose on borrowers! In a 2013 case (Ruiz v. 1st Fidelity Loan Servicing, LLC), Schneider tried to foreclose with botched paperwork but the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled against him. This case is widely cited and has significantly strengthened the position of Minnesota homeowners contesting foreclosure.[3]

A. Examples in Dayen’s own story show Schneider harmed borrowers. Any informed reader of Dayen’s story would know that his homeowner anecdotes don’t fit his “Schneider hero/Chase villain” Procrustean bed.

As a typical example of homeowners that Dayen depicts as “victims” of Chase’s “shell game,” he selects a family, the Warwicks, whose loan was improperly forgiven by Chase. Later, Chase bought back their loan from the mortgage holder and forgave it properly. As a result, the Warwicks got a house free and clear. This makes them victims how, exactly?

According to the story, Chase bought back twelve similar mortgages and forgave them correctly – that’s twelve more homeowners helped by Chase, and in a very big way too.

In November 2012, in fact, Chase offered to buy back all loans that had been incorrectly forgiven of which Schneider was aware, and to pay Schneider a 50-percent premium above what he paid. However, Schneider refused to sell some of the loans back. Schneider insisted that Chase tell at least some of the affected borrowers that the loan forgiveness was a mistake, and that those borrowers, including the Warwicks, should continue to pay Schneider. This allowed Schneider to continue collecting from the Warwicks, apparently for three entire years. Schneider purchased the $160,413 loan on Sept. 29, 2009, for $10,500. Chase eventually repaid Schneider the full $160,413.

Someone here was working at cross purposes to the interests of borrowers, but it wasn’t Chase.

Not only does Dayen’s own reporting contradict his central framing about who was the good versus the bad guy, but he failed to inform readers about what he himself knew about Schneider’s business practices: see below for Dayen’s statement to me that he was well aware of Schneider’s frequent foreclosures when writing the pieces.

B. Dayen left readers in the dark about how Schneider regularly and ruthlessly forecloses on homeowners . According to The Nation, Schneider’s model of doing business involves “being flexible and dealing with homeowners directly” while “work[ing] out new repayment terms, allowing borrowers to stay in their homes.” The Nation thus depicts Schneider as modifying mortgages so that the terms become reasonable, and so making it so everyone can win.

But in county after county, I found foreclosures from Schneider’s companies attempting to toss families from their homes. For instance, in Florida, there are Schneider victims in Palm Beach County, Broward, Miami-Dade, and Orange County at least. There are cases in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Minnesota. There’s one in New Jersey active as of February, this year.

I kept finding foreclosures from Schneider companies in state after state until I gave up. There are so many, and they are so widespread, that it’s not feasible without significant resources to figure out how many mortgages he forecloses versus how many he modifies and on what terms. Dayen could have obtained actual evidence bearing on this point by asking Schneider for a list and then analyzing the resulting data. He did not.

We can, however, look at particular cases. We have seen that Dayen interviewed the Warwicks, victims of Chase’s “shell game” who after all was said and done, ended up with a free house from Chase. Now let’s look at a second family, from Schneider’s county; their surname is redacted here for reasons of privacy.

C. An example of Schneider’s business model: A mortgage buy resulting in Christmas eviction instead of a profitable modification. Willie and Edrica lived in Palm Beach Florida in a squat house with a mowed lawn – not a mansion, but nevertheless a home for their family.

On April 13, 2007, Willie and Edrica took out a $140,000 mortgage from Chase Bank USA NA. They agreed to pay 7.125% over LIBOR, with the rate adjusted every six months subject to certain restrictions. Even by subprime standards this was a terrible deal.[4]

Chase sold Willie and Edrica’s mortgage to Schneider for $7,500, so for 5.4 cents on the dollar. It’s easy to see why The Nation is so impressed by Schneider’s business model – he then modified their mortgage, asking them to pay $900 a month. Consider Schneider’s generosity – he was only asking them to pay a mere 144% interest (not44%) on his $,7500 investment (taking the $900 as the monthly P&I payment on a 30-year mortgage).

On Feb. 25, Willie and Edrica both filed handwritten letters letting the court know they were seeking an attorney and asking for time to respond to Larry’s foreclosure.

On April 5, Edrica filed this handwritten notice with the court:

Please accept this response although it is past the time allotted time for a reply. We were in court for an extension but the case was heard, before the time we given. We have attempted on many occasions to reach out to the lender and also make arranges including a loan modification without sufficient luck. We disagree with the filings brought against us and the attempt to foreclose. With all due respect to the courts please accept this response to the Notice of Lis Pendens.

Willie filed his own handwritten notice the same day.

In a county where contested foreclosures routinely take 2-3 years, and ten-year foreclosures are not uncommon, Willie and Edrica’s flew through the system like an aggressive cancer.

On August 23, 2011, a Final Judgment was entered against Willie and Edrica for $178,829.56 (so for $40,000 more than was originally demanded). Willie responded with a typed motion and affidavit asking the court to reconsider, stating that he paid until he was no longer able, then was working on a modification, and in any case was never properly served. His motion was promptly denied.

On October 7, Schneider bought Willie and Edrica’s house at auction for $2600. On November 15, Schneider filed for a Writ of Possession to evict them. Willie responded with an affidavit stating that Carmen Mertin, on behalf of Schneider’s company, had offered him $1200 to move. According to Willie:

Because the previous sale date had been cancelled and I was conducting good faith negotiations with plaintiff’s representative, Ms. Mertins to vacate the premises, I was surprised to learn that plaintiff was moving this Court for a writ of possession… I will accept Ms. Mertins offer and voluntarily vacate the premises. I did not vacate the premises as yet because I have two young children and it has been somewhat difficult to find a new location near their school. I am attempting to not let this terrible situation affect them too drastically by moving far away and disrupting their school routine.” [emphasis mine]

Six days later, judge Diana Lewis granted Schneider his eviction order. Willie, Edrica, and their two young children were to be evicted on or after December 28.

There were other ways the story could have gone. Schneider could have written a 5-year mortgage for triple what he paid at 6% interest. The P&I payment on a 5-year $22,500 mortgage ($7500×3) at 6% would have been $435, just under half what Schneider was charging.[5] Willie and Edrica and their kids would still be in their home, and Schneider would have tripled his original investment. He would have done well.

But perhaps not as well as he actually made out. Three years after the Christmas eviction, after presumably renting the house to tenants, Schneider sold the house for $107,500. A respectable profit, considering the $,7500 he paid to Chase and the few thousand in fees he paid to foreclose (even without taking into account the amount Willie and Edrica and other tenants paid him in rent).

D. Dayen offers only a half-hearted defense of Schneider’s business practices. In his response to me, Dayen confirmed that while writing the two articles, he knew about “numerous instances that come up in public records and the body of his complaints of his companies pursuing foreclosures, which while technically legal […] are certainly morally dubious considering the low price paid.” Dayen added that “I would pursue Schneider’s business far differently if I was the business owner but I’m not.”

Dayen claims that Chase committed fraud in order to fulfill its obligations under the National Mortgage Settlement of 2012 and he furthermore accuses Chase of harming homeowners and cities in the process. In fact, Chase was forgiving mortgages, which was not only permitted but encouraged by the National Mortgage Settlement. Dayen has to tell a “white is black” tale to depict a pro-homeowner action as somehow detrimental.

A. Contra Dayen, Chase’s mortgage forgiveness program did not violate the National Mortgage Settlement. These claims by Dayen, once again, uncritically repeat allegations made by Schneider. In addition to Schneider’s preposterous $300 million lawsuit for damages on his mortgage purchase, he has also filed a whistleblower (qui tam) suit, alleging that Chase defrauded the federal and state governments in its efforts to meet the terms of the National Mortgage Settlement.

The Nation neglects to inform the reader that, thus far, whenever disinterested parties have weighed in on Schneider’s lawsuits, they have been dismissive. In December 2016, a federal judge threw out his claims under the National Mortgage Settlement, and did so with prejudice (Schneider has appealed). In New York, courts have found three times that, even granting Schneider’s version of the facts, his case was hopeless, leading each time to Schneider amending his complaint and trying again. Already in January 2014, the Obama Department of Justice, invited to support Schneider’s case, declined; its decision has since been reiterated by all relevant state attorneys general and by the Trump Department of Justice.[6]

The Nation charges that “federal appointees” are actually “complicit.” We are to believe there is a conspiracy between the Department of Justice under both Obama and Trump, federal judges and magistrates, and every relevant state Attorney General, along with California’s much praised independent mortgage settlement monitor, Professor Katie Porter, as well as with Chase, and including CEO Jamie Dimon personally, all working together against Larry Schneider. Oh.

Actually reading the cases – instead of listening to Schneider and his lawyers – shows that the courts and other relevant officials have determined that Schneider’s accusations are simply wrong.

The only evidence that The Nation offers for the government’s supposed “complicity” is that “[e]-mails show that the Office of Mortgage Settlement Oversight […] gave Chase the green light to forgive its loans.” Once again, Dayen is complaining that borrowers had their loans forgiven (presumably instead of being foreclosed on).

This is stunning as well as perverse. Dayen of all people should know that one of the major rationales for this part of the National Mortgage Settlement was to keep homeowners in their homes. Forgiving mortgages does that. What Chase did in this case was exactly what the National Mortgage Settlement was designed to do. Yet Dayen falsely depicts this as a bad outcome and an abuse. What is going on here?

B. Contra Dayen, Chase’s mortgage forgiveness did not harm homeowners. The Nation claims that homeowners were “burned” and “exploited” by Chase’s “scam” in forgiving loans that it did not own. Generally homeowners are not hurt by having their loans forgiven – what, then, is The Nation asserting here?

The Nation also claims that a different set of homeowners were harmed by the loan forgiveness program, namely, those who had “abandoned the[ir] homes years earlier.” The Nation asserts that in these cases loan forgiveness “transferred responsibility for paying back taxes and repairs back to the homeowner.” In a flight of poetry, The Nation evokes a “recurring horror story in which ‘zombie foreclosures’ were resurrected from the dead in order to wreak havoc on people’s financial lives.”

I would like to emphasize here that Dayen is claiming that forgiving mortgages is often bad for mortgage borrowers. Since this flies in the face of common sense, it would be interesting if Dayen were onto something here. However, this theory is nonsense. Would any reader object to their bank tearing up their mortgage, a 100 percent unconditional principal write-down? The answer is obvious enough – it sounds like a trick question but it’s not, except to Dayen.

The responsibility for paying property tax and maintaining one’s house lies with the owner of the property. Whether the property is mortgaged, and whether the mortgage loan is forgiven, has nothing to do with it. If a family abandons a home, thinking it will lose it in foreclosure, and later the mortgage is unexpectedly forgiven, the family has two options. It can return home, paying property taxes and doing the necessary maintenance – it then gets what is essentially a free house. Or it can simply walk away, and then the municipality will take the property. In no case is the family worse off when its mortgage is forgiven.[8]

Once again, what does common sense tell us? Are people more likely to take care of a property if they own it outright or if they believe a lender will soon seize it?

Dayen responds to me on this point by specifying that when he called out “zombie foreclosures,” he was referring to “the scourge of unoccupied and un-maintained properties abandoned by banks […] after the former borrowers vacated in expectation of foreclosure.” Dayen asserts that “forgiving liens on these uninhabitable homes does nothing for the former owners,” but does not defend the depiction in the Special Report, where he characterized loan forgiveness in such cases not as neutral, but as positively harmful, producing a “recurring horror story” that wreaked “havoc on people’s financial lives.”

C. Contra Dayen, Chase’s mortgage forgiveness did not harm local governments.The Nation urges its readers to become indignant: “If you pay taxes in a municipality where Chase spun its trickery, you helped pick up the tab.” The tab for what? As a result of Chase’s “shell game,” “abandoned properties deteriorated further, spreading urban blight,” and costing cities money (difficulties ascertaining who owned the property, increased costs to maintain or demolish the buildings, increased police presence to maintain order in such areas).

Does any of this make sense? It is large scale abandonment of houses that contributes to blight, not loan forgiveness, nor does forgiving mortgage debt encourage borrowers to abandon homes.[9]

Let’s consider a real example, a home in Columbus, Ohio.

The owner did not pay their 2016 property tax of $595.14. Nor their delinquent tax of $8,013.11, penalty of $515.03, or back interest of $1,195.25. Finally, the city levied a six-month special assessment of $10,055.94 for maintenance. Since the owner did not pay the city, the mortgage holder could have made these payments instead in order to retain rights for the property, but declined to do so. The city tried to auction the property but, failing to find any bidders willing pay the full amount of taxes, took the property for itself on Oct. 6, 2017 (just a few weeks ago). The mortgage owner that declined to pay the property tax or the special assessment is Mortgage Resolution Servicing, Inc., a company owned by Larry Schneider.

In a particularly bizarre part of the Phony Mortgages article, The Nation insinuates that Chase must have been up to something sinister by (1) investing $100 million in Detroit, (2) waiting until after the investment before forgiving loans in the Detroit area, (3) subsequently forgiving 10,229 liens in Wayne County. I have criticized Chase in the past, but for harming borrowers, not for forgiving their loans.

More than on any other topic, The Nation spends its column inches trying to work its readership into a lather over how Chase treated Schneider; the Behind JPMorgan Chase’s Bait and Switch article is, in fact, almost exclusively devoted to this topic. Let us look at these accusations.

Chase sold Schneider multiple bundles of loans. In the first, from 2003-2010, Chase sold Schneider bundles totaling 1003 loans with a face value of $54.1 million. He paid $6.4 million, averaging just under 12 cents on the dollar. The Nation doesn’t indicate Schneider had any problems with this set of loans; it concentrates its criticism on the other bulk deal.

In that second batch of loans, Chase sold Schneider 3259 mortgages with a face value of $156.3 million for $200,000. That trade closed February 25, 2009.

In Schneider’s New York lawsuit, which is a commercial suit on his own behalf, he claims:

“As a direct and proximate result of Defendants’ acts as alleged above, Plaintiffs have been damaged in an amount to be proven at trial of no less than $300 million.”

If Schneider is referring to both sets of loans, Schneider is demanding $300 million in legal damages on an investment of $6.6 million. But if the controversy is mostly over the second deal, then he wants $300 million on an investment of $200,000, more than the face value of this entire bundle of severely impaired loans. Surely, given this level of damages, Schneider must have been treated horribly. Let’s look.

The Nation alleges that Schneider was tricked into believing that the $200,000 package of “toxic waste” was better quality than it turned out to be. Schneider was acquiring loans at 0.13 cents on the dollar, a little more than one thousandth of face value. He was buying them at the height of the worst financial crisis since the Depression.And we are supposed to believe that he thought he was receiving good quality mortgages?

For its part, Chase was unambiguous that this batch of loans was terrible – the disclaimers in the sale agreementare unusually forceful:

While The Nation waxes eloquent over the hardships Schneider experienced with this paltry $200,000 investment, Schneider’s subsequent actions were hardly those of a buyer who thought he had been cheated. He continued to buy mortgages from Chase for the next two years, and the amount he bought was larger than he had ever bought before, both in terms of price and face value.[10]

To give Schneider the benefit of the doubt, there is only one independently verifiable case in which Chase demonstrably screwed up in ways that affected Schneider’s interests: They released about 40 mortgages they had already sold to Schneider. But was Schneider actually harmed by this mistake?

Recall that Schneider purchased the entire “toxic waste” package of 3259 loans for $200,000 plus another 1003 loans for an average of about 12-cents on the dollar. The Nation’s Special Report offers only specific criticisms of the “toxic waste” package. A casual reader would assume that the mistakenly forgiven loans were simply further evidence that something was wrong with the “toxic” package. In fact, this assumption would be wrong: At least some of the loans, including the Warwicks’ loan highlighted in the article, were not from this deal.

In any case, Chase bought back the package of 13 loans for $105,375. The bank offered to buy back and forgive 10 more loans, including the Warwicks’ loan for $100,759; Schneider however refused, evidently assuming he could make more from those mortgages in borrower payments and foreclosures. Chase eventually agreed to buy back the Warwicks’ mortgage and another with similar characteristics for full face value, namely $428,053.61. Altogether, Chase paid Schneider $533,428 to buy back 15 loans.

Summing up, for just 15 loans, Chase paid Schneider more than twice (267%) what he had paid for the entire “toxic waste” bundle which the Nation highlighted, while leaving Schneider in possession of at least 3244 of the original 3259 loans. If he had accepted their offer for the 10 additional loans forgiven in error, he would have realized 317% of the price of the “toxic” deal on which he was supposedly victimized, all the while still owning at least[11] 3234 of the original loans.

Words fail me. This is the abuse that The Nation considers worthy of a Special Report? If this is what The Nation considers victimization, I would like to be victimized, too.

Conclusion

When The Nation states that “[t]elegraphing to executives that they will emerge unscathed after committing crimes not only invites further crimes; it makes another financial crisis more likely,” I absolutely agree. The way to raise awareness of the problem of financial crime is, however, to highlight instances of real wrongdoing, not to bill flimsy accusations largely dictated by a single source as groundbreaking exposés. Doing so trivializes and discredits efforts to illuminate the flaws in our financial system.

The Nation owes its readers better.

NOTES

[1] It is true that the National Mortgage Settlement allowed banks to take credit for modifying or forgiving mortgages that had been securitized and sold off to investors – a rule that richly deserved criticism, and in fact both Dayen and I criticized it at the time. Schneider/Dayen’s accusation in the Special Report is completely different: they do not criticize Chase (along with other banks) for taking advantage of technicalities in the NMS, but incorrectly allege that Chase committed outright fraud, forgiving mortgages with which it no longer had any legal relationship.

[2] Did The Nation run an expose based on lawsuits without pulling an official record of those lawsuits? Their story links to a partial docket, for one of the three cases, at a website called the “Fraud Investigation Bureau,” whatever that is. Why not link to the vastly more credible Court Listener, a free archive derived from the government’s official PACER court case repository? Or link to PACER itself, despite the paywall?

[3] When searching “1st Fidelity loan servicing” (1st Fidelity is one of Schneider’s three companies) – Google returns the Ruiz case first. It’s difficult to understand why this was entirely omitted from the story.

[4] Each adjustment period the loan could increase or decrease no more than 1.5% but could never be lower than 10.313% nor higher than 17.313%.

[5] The P&I for tripling his money on a 30-year mortgage – with, say, a ten-year balloon that assumed that they would be able to refi and Schneider would be able to cash in – would have been $134.90.

[6] Schneider already lost his whistleblower lawsuit. “[Schneider] intimates no facts that could rescue his [False Claims Act] allegations relating to the National Mortgage Settlement and the undisputed facts show that an amendment would be futile,” ruled Federal Judge Rosemary M. Collyer on Dec. 22, 2016, dismissing the core claims with prejudice. With prejudice means case closed: Schneider loses. Moreover, in a brief filed in the whistleblower appeal, docketed June 14, 2017, the government wrote “The United States declined to intervene in this suit and does not take the position that Chase failed to comply with the terms agreed to in the National Mortgage Settlement.”

In January 2014, Obama’s Justice Department declined to participate in Schneider’s whistleblower suit. The Nation wrote “…Schneider is also aiding the federal government in a related case against the bank.” No, he is not aiding the government because the Department of Justice, like Judge Collyer, does not believe that Chase committed fraud.

Schneider has appealed his whistleblower case: there is an entire appellate case unmentioned by The Nation. In that case, the US government reiterated they do not believe Schneider’s core claim that Chase fraudulently took National Mortgage Settlement credits. Here is the relevant docket, including elections to decline intervention by the US and by over 20 states (every state that filed a notice declined to participate).

The “blockbuster” racketeering case is on its fourth amended complaint: that means a judge has found three times that Schneider’s case makes no sense, even granting all of his statements of fact, and three times Schneider has modified his complaint and persisted. Here is the relevant docket.

[7] In fact, many of the loans that Schneider alleged had been forgiven in order to claim settlement credit under the NMS, including the RCV1 loans (the ones in the “toxic waste” bundle), were actually forgiven two years before the NMS even existed.

[8] Dayen might have been attempting to argue that borrowers who have their mortgages forgiven suffer because the IRS regards forgiveness of debt as income and the borrowers therefore face a significant tax liability. However, looking at 26 U.S. Code § 108 – Income from discharge of indebtedness, it’s clear that mortgage borrowers have two outs:

(B) the discharge occurs when the taxpayer is insolvent…

(E) the indebtedness discharged is qualified principal residence indebtedness which is discharged—

(i) before January 1, 2017, or

(ii) subject to an arrangement that is entered into and evidenced in writing before January 1, 2017

[9] In his response, Dayen does not claim otherwise – he there says “blighted properties” often arose because “banks delayed many years before foreclosing on these abandoned properties and failed to maintain them,” which has nothing to do with loan forgiveness and nothing to do with the specific accusations against Chase that are ostensibly the subject of the Special Report.

[10] In the four years leading up to the “toxic waste” deal, Schneider bought 530 loans from Chase for $2,185,227 (face value $16,446,709); in the two subsequent years, he bought 472 loans from Chase for $4,227,229 (face value $37,675,106). See here for a spreadsheet containing all of these loans.

In his response to me, Dayen says that according to Schneider, he continued to buy loans from Chase “because he was trying to establish trust with another point of contact at the bank, so he could resolve the issue with the MLPA [Mortgage Loan Purchase Agreement],” and that Dayen regrets that The Nation’s editors cut this information from the final draft. This is ridiculous – Schneider bought $4 million worth of loans from Chase because he thought he had been cheated on a $200,000 deal?

[11] “at least,” here and above, because we do not know how many of the forgiven loans were actually from the “toxic waste” deal.